Food stocks are running out across Southern Africa: by March 2003 the
numbers of people facing starvation will be: 6 million in Zimbabwe/3.2
m. in Malawi/2.4 m. in Zambia/over .5 m. in Mozambique
MORE INFO: http://www.actionaid.org/
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According to ActionAid, Southern Africa's worst maize shortage in living
memory means that over 14 million people in Angola, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique,
Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe are facing starvation and hundreds have
already died. Yet dealing with this terrible food crisis is being made
more complex by other agendas.

The political failings of Zimbabwe's current leadership and their tense
relations with many western governments are all too well known and, given
the severity of this crisis, it may be that only the US has the resources
to really respond on the scale required. However, suspicions about some
of the US's motivations for its actions in the region may also not be without
foundation. It is the case, after all, as Catherine Bertini, Executive
Director of the World Food Program, has made plain, "Food is power. We
use it to change behavior. Some may call that bribery. We do not apologize"

Witness George Bush's recent increase in the US aid budget specifically
for the purpose of encouraging the uptake of biotechnology. As the article
below makes plain, the US also seems to be tying in economic assistance
to acceptance of GMOs, "Zambian Vice President Enock Kavindele told Reuters
in Lusaka that his country had declined a $50 million (31 million pounds)
line of credit from the U.S. Department of Agriculture because of provisions
that it would have to purchase GMO commodities." And the kind of 'eat GM
or starve' rhetoric coming out of USAID, an organisation advised by biotech
industry stalwart CS Prakash, also appears less than helpful. Working with
the governments concerned to rapidly resolve the problems, where possible,
has to be the most constructive response.

Find out more about ActionAid's carefully thought through emergency
work in Southern Africa:
http://www.actionaid.org/ourpriorities/emergencies/cisa.shtml

Countries facing famine in southern Africa should accept genetically
modified (GMO) food or risk death for millions of its people, a top U.S.
official has said.

A severe food crisis threatens 13 million people in the six countries
in the region - with Malawi and Zimbabwe the worst hit.

The U.N. has appealed for a million tonnes of food, and traditionally
half of the donation comes from America.

"The one issue that has caused the most controversy, and frankly is
causing us the most difficulty, is the issue of so-called GMO-affected
foods," said Roger Winter, assistant administrator at the U.S. Agency for
International Development.

"What we are being asked in some cases to do is to certify that a shipment
of maize is GMO-free and that we are not able to do," Winter told reporters
as he wound up a tour of the region, which took him to Malawi, Zambia,
Zimbabwe and Mozambique.

"Delay (on accepting GMOs) is deadly in this. If they delay long, people
are going to die in their countries because there are going to be huge
gaps in the (food) pipeline" he said.

He said Zimbabwe had previously blocked GMO food while Zambia had no
policy. Only Malawi was ready to take whatever food aid it got because
the only concern was to save lives.

Winter said Zimbabwe had accepted to take in a special consignment of
20,000 tonnes of maize that included GMO foods after USAID gave the country
an August 1 deadline to take it or lose it. But he said that there was
no word on future maize donations and therefore he did not take this to
mean a policy about-turn.

Winter hinted that the blockage of GMO-food by Zimbabwe may be related
to tense relations between Washington and Harare.

"The government (of Zimbabwe) wasn't really focused on what the consequences
of not receiving our products might mean," Winter said, acknowledging the
sour relations.

ZAMBIA REJECTS U.S. LOAN

Zambian Vice President Enock Kavindele told Reuters in Lusaka that his
country had declined a $50 million (31 million pounds) line of credit from
the U.S. Department of Agriculture because of provisions that it would
have to purchase GMO commodities.

Governments had began asking fresh questions about health risks related
to GMOs in the region after a recent meeting of ministers of the 14 member
Southern African Development Community in Mozambique, USAID official Lauren
Landis said.

Winter said a rejection of GMO food by the region could trim the U.S.
ability to respond to the crisis, which he warned had the potential to
last beyond current projections of March 2003.

He also said that the U.S. and other agencies would set up a monitoring
unit to ensure that relief aid was not abused. It followed reports that
in some areas of Zimbabwe, the government was using relief as a weapon
against opposition supporters.

Experts have warned of lower crop harvests in Southern Africa and a
medical crisis in the region after the 2002 drought.

Agri-meteorologist Johan van den Berg, of the Envirovision Consultancy,
said a weak to moderate climate disruption expected during the next southern
summer could trim Southern African grain harvests, but might boost crops
in drought-ravaged areas in the region.

The latest seasonal forecast pointed to a maize crop 10 to 30 percent
lower next year than this year, van den Berg said.

In Swaziland, a WHO meeting was warned of a malaria crisis in the post&#45;drought
period and health leaders were asked to be ready.

Mosquitoes would move in large large numbers and transmission and incidents
of malaria would accelerate when rains fell, Dr Shiva Marugasampillay from
Zimbabwe told a World Health Organisation Southern Africa malaria conference.
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